Silence Can Be Telling

Silence can be telling.

It suggests a coming storm; the calm before the thunderclouds burst and send forth a deluge.

It implies inner peace; a moment of meditation and thought on the mountain above the valleys of turmoil.

It reeks of fear and tension; the shadows formed from unspoken truths between brothers, sisters, enemies, neighbors.

It speaks of hope; the unsung dreams of millions yearning for something they cannot yet reach.

Mostly, silence tells us nothing without us.

For we are the ones speaking in the silence:

…dreaming…hoping…fearing…warning…

Photo by Mitch Dobrowner

My silence is no different.  It has been all of these things and yet none of them.  For I am the one who ultimately must make use and meaning out of my silence.  Last time I entered such a phase, not even writing for myself, I was in a darkness that has continued to haunt me to this day.  Self-doubt, fear of failure, the fraud police, and self-hate all kept me from seeing my way through.  As I’ve written before, eventually I found a way, but it’s easy to forget how much those shadows can cling.

For months now, the silence and shadows have been creeping back into my life, dimming the light a little.  Even as I have finally opened up about my struggle with depression, fear, self-loathing, and self-loving, I have found myself sinking again.  Life began to feel like wading through muddy water.  For awhile I was fatigued each day for no reason, physical reactions to my mental state.  I’ve isolated myself…just a little bit really…and I second guess myself at most turns.  My effectiveness at work has suffered (I hide it well so I don’t know how many even notice), and my motivation in general is stunted.  I’ve stopped caring as much (though the important things, my friends, family, creativity…I still care about those).  It doesn’t help that I’ve been at a crossroads in my life, trying to make decisions and move forward only to constantly have it thrown back at me that I might just not be worth it…or even adequate enough to consider (or warrant at least a response).  It only makes the shadows darker, makes my head foggier, my heart heavier, and my hope a little smaller.

You see, for the first time in years, I’ve actually thought about self-harm.

There, I said it.  The words that I’ve refused to say aloud.

Not suicide, nothing dangerous, not even cutting…but the thought of it…that feeling it might somehow…some way…release the built up pain and anxiety and fear for even just a moment.  In that moment…to feel the hope again, to feel grounded.

Let me be clear, I’ve never harmed myself.  The closest I’ve come is digging my nails into my arms…holding myself so tight that it helps me focus on the pain on my skin instead of the pain in my head and heart.  For most of you, and most of the people I try to explain this feeling to in person, it sounds completely and utterly crazy.  I’ve longed for someone who could say, “I understand.”  I have yet to find that person. Yes, I realize this urge is a problem.  It’s the same feeling I had the first time I asked for help back in high school.  I had that thought, that urge for pain, and I went sobbing into my mother’s arms.  I didn’t understand it at 17.  At 31, I’m starting to get it.

Once again, it’s this hope for release that has made me remember to stop being silent.  So here I am.

My final realization that I needed change came just over a week ago.  You see, this girl I knew, a beautiful 23 year old wonderful person, died.

Suddenly.

We weren’t close.  I hadn’t seen or spoken to her in years, but I did babysit her when she and her sister were small.  She lived next door to my cousins, and the four of them were the best of friends, which is how I ended up taking all of them to the pool or playing pretend in living rooms.

I was already stewing in my own emotional bile when this happened. I didn’t expect her death to impact me as much as it did.  However, the sadness and fatigue became deeper, darker, and I just couldn’t see through it all.  I guess, in the cliched way, it was my bottom.

I don’t want to be the 31 year old with no hope or motivation.  I don’t want to be sitting in the darkness glaring at myself.  And I don’t want to be afraid anymore.  I want to let go of the self-loathing and that fear of failure and discover positive moments hidden in the shadows.  I want to know that when my end comes, that I have lived, truly lived, and left something positive and real in my wake. I just hope I have years upon years to do so.

And so I’ve made a start, by talking: To my husband, my family, my friends. I’ve started to let them see this darkness, because it exists in me.  It will probably always be here, and if they can love that part of me too, then I have one less thing to fear, one less thing to loathe, and one more reason to see love within.  Also I’m going to start counseling, because that third party can help if I’m willing to let them.     I am definitely willing.

Already, little things like talking, writing, going out and actually doing have made a difference. I’m rediscovering the simple love of family: talking to them, being with them.  I’ve reached out to hopefully develop some new, fun, positive friendships.  Even a little wonderful private Facebook community has ended up being the best support group…something I hardly expected.  In there, I don’t need to speak to feel the outpouring of compassion and hope and to also feel the camaraderie with those who are struggling as well (sloth hugs to you beautiful folks).

So, the changes have begun, but it is just a start.  The difference this time is that I won’t let myself stay silent.  I’m holding myself accountable by being vocal.  This is no cry for help or attention.  Here, I am sharing my pain and fear, shedding the shame of it, and embracing hope.

I guess I made meaning in my silence after all.

The first year with our Prince!

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Two minutes after I received the official notification he was officially a Rau!

One year ago today, this handsome boy walked into our house and took over our hearts.  Time flies when you let a greyhound (or any animal really) take over your couch..bed..yard..EVERYTHING!  We love our Prince, and to celebrate one year of him, I couldn’t pass up a small photo celebration!

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We met him up at County Animal Hospital, after his long drive in with two others from Oklahoma. You can tell here he needed a few cheeseburgers still.

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His first night at home, and the couch is claimed.

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In an attempt to showcase his Escaped Tongue Syndrome, we instead made it look as if we were choking him…his first night at home…

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Such beauty. Much grace. SO greyhound.

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He make a mad guitar choice for Marc (or one crazy baby).

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Definitely a good cuddler, if a bit bony.

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Prince can manage to pause occasionally for a selfie with me.

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Though sometimes I do wonder if he’s actually an alien.

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I love this handsome face!

Happy Gotcha Day, Prince!  I’m so happy we have you in our lives!

Reader Questionnaire and Random Musings

I found this over on bluchickenninja’s blog awhile back, but I haven’t had the time to follow suit until now. It just felt like a fun little writing exercise, and I’ve been silent on the blog for a few days due to, well, life stuff (good life stuff, just stuff). Feel free to follow suit on your own writing exercise.

1. What is your favorite book?

Like most avid readers, this question is nearly impossible to actually answer. Really?! JUST ONE?! Still, I do have a few that I point to as “keystone” books for shaping who I am.  Jane Eyre, which I read in the 6th grade, remains a turning point for me as a reader.

Who DOESN'T want a Jane Eyre baby book?!

Who DOESN’T want a Jane Eyre baby book?!

Jane Yolen’s Sister Light, Sister Dark and White Jenna were equally as pivotal.

 sisterlsd whitejenna

2. What are your goals? For the year? For your life?

First, to get healthier. I know this is an ongoing goal, but I’m really focusing on it right now.

Second, reading a minimum of 48 books for this year and writing in this blog regularly. So far, I think I’ll come out ahead!

3. Are you a writer? If so, tell me about your work.

This is a bit of a loaded question. I assume it means, “are you a published or attempting to be published writer.” I’m certainly not published, and I’m not certain I’m trying, but I do consider myself a writer. A writer of poetry, critical thought, ideas, life. Aren’t we all writers of a sort on here? Words and writing feel like part of my blood and breath, and that in turn describes “my work.”  Usually spur of the moment tales, dark dreaming landscape stories and poems. I have more ideas and outlines than full creative monsters, but then again, being here is already helping me develop that further.

4. If you could go anywhere in the world, where would you go?

Just one place?!  Iceland. Ireland. The Mountains (any mountains). On another train trip…maybe through the mountains.

Via Trains & Travel

Via Trains & Travel with Jim Loomis

5. What was the last movie you saw in the theatre and was it worthwhile?

American Sniper. This past weekend for my brother-in-law’s birthday. I almost went into full analytic mode about the movie here. The only thing that stopped me was getting home from the movie at Midnight. And, yes, it was worth it.

6. I’m curious, are there any books that you’ve tried to read and simply couldn’t finish? This is a no judgement zone.

Under the Dome by Stephen King. Don’t get me wrong, I like him, just NOT that book.  Middlemarch by George Eliot.

7. Are you currently working on a new book/project right now? If it’s secret, you don’t have to tell me about it. If so, however, I hope it’s going well.

Again, not a professional writer, so no. But I do have a few ideas in the work (mostly random children’s tales). Also, I need to finish editing my “poem”  A Salmon Named Ella. 

A salmon named Ella
And Nelson Mandela
One fine sunny Cape Town morn,

Deeply were talking,
While swimming and walking,
About why the fish was so forlorn.

8. If you could live in any of your favorite books, which one would you choose?

Jane Eyre, possibly or Harry Potter because, come on…

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9. Are there any book-to-movie adaptations that you think are just incredible? That you absolutely hated?

Going back a bit, Contact by Carl Sagan is pretty good, though it cuts a lot of the hard core science for the movie. Also, the 2006 BBC miniseries Jane Eyre, is AWESOME. The 2011 version, not so much.  Eragon is also butchered in the film.

10. What do you look for in a book that you want to read? What’s the first thing to capture your attention?

I’ll admit it, I have a type: strong female character, unique world (dystopian/fantasy), well written prose.  I do read other things, but these are the ones that grab me first.

11. If you’re an author, what do you do when you first get an idea for a book?

Again, doesn’t apply, but my problem is that I spend hours upon hours obsessing, thinking, dreaming up the story…without writing.

12. How do you feel about different genres? Romance? YA? Sci-Fi? Poetry? Do you have any favorites? Any least-favorites?

I’m open to almost anything, but I’m not big into crime stories (Tana French’s books being an exception) or generic romance.  I do love YA, Sci-Fi, Fantasy, Autobiography, & Historical Fiction.

13. If you could meet any writer in the world, dead or alive, who would it be?

Jane Yolen. Yes, she trumps Bronte on my list because she was kind enough to answer questions for a folklore project through e-mail when I was in college. SO. COOL.

14. Do you prefer Fiction or Non-Fiction?

Fiction. But I never underestimate the power of a very good non-fiction book.

15. Are there any characters that everyone loves that you can’t stand? Or vice versa?

I hate…HATE Catherine and Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights. Please…let them rot.

Also, I don’t like Twilight so I therefore despise all of the characters.

16. What do you like to do besides reading/writing?

Spinning (yarn), making soap, cooking, baking…lots of bread. Sometimes hiking, crocheting.

17. If you could be remembered for one thing, what would it be?

Apparently turning my house slowly into the witch’s house in Hansel & Gretel.

18. What is your favorite guilty pleasure book?

Anne Bishop’s Dark Jewel’s Trilogy.

Dark-Jewels

19. Do you have a reading goal set for this year?

Stated earlier: 48 books! On numbers 8 & 9 for the year right now.

20. Tell me anything about yourself that I haven’t asked. Random fact. Weird human trick. Whatever.

I am obsessed with weird animals. I want a random animal farm one day. Sheep, alpaca, chickens, goats, you name it.  I’ve wanted a pet skunk since I was a kid. I would name him Broccoli. I also think armadillos are awesome and want an armadillo basket (a taxidermied basket).

Oh yeah, I like weird taxidermy…Just look at the hat in my profile picture.